A molded body is tightly fitted to the wire guide block on the side facing the collet and laterally to the guide groove that is braced against the collet via attachment media coming in from the side of the collet and is attached to the latter in a wire guide for a wire processing machine, in particular a spring manufacturing machine. It is also used to guide a wire feed to wire processing tools and is attached to a wire guide block with a collet, thereby forming a guide groove for the wire.
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1. A wire guide for use with a wire processing machine to guide a wire feed to wire processing tools, the wire guide comprising:
a collet attached to a wire guide block having a guide groove; and
a molded body tightly fitted into the wire guide block on a side facing the collet and laterally to the guide groove, and braced against the collet with an attachment member.
2. The wire guide of
3. The wire guide of
4. The wire guide of
5. The wire guide of
6. The wire guide of
7. The wire guide of
9. The wire guide of
10. The wire guide of
11. The wire guide of
12. The wire guide of
13. The wire guide of
14. The wire guide of
15. The wire guide of
16. The wire guide of
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The invention concerns a wire guide for a wire-processing machine, as can be used in particular for spring manufacturing machines, for guiding a wire feed to wire processing tools. It also includes a collet to which a detachable wire guide block is attached, which forms a guide groove for the wire.
To save space and with the goal of achieving a desired sleekness of design, known wire guides for wire processing machines are normally attached to the collet using clamps (in the form of outer clamps) applied from the side of the wire guide facing away from the collet. Because applying a clamp with only one screw does not allow for optimal clamping force, is customary to use two screws each when screwing in the clamps. In addition, two clamps are used for the purpose of distributing the clamping force, one above and one below the guide groove in the wire guide block; this is relatively expensive.
Other known wire guides consist of two halves, with each half screwed separately into the collet. A thread insert is soldered into the respective wire guide half for the purpose of accommodating the screw. However, when soldering in such thread inserts, the wire guide shows distortion, which is undesirable, caused by stress due to heat. In addition, the thread insert can be pulled out of its bore if the screw is tightened too much or if the screw used is too long, making the wire guide unusable. Even when using only one screw per wire guide half for the attachment, the result is a less than optimal clamping force.
Based on the above, the purpose of the invention is to develop a wire guide that eliminates most of the aforementioned disadvantages and which, in particular, no longer uses thread inserts.
This purpose is achieved in the invention with a wire guide of the type mentioned in the introduction by tightly fitting a molded body to the wire guide block on the side facing the collet and laterally to the guide groove that originates from the side of the collet, which jams the attachment media against the collet. It is then attached to the collet.
In the wire guide according to the invention, it is possible to forgo the special thread insert attachment. Moreover, the invention has the advantage that it jams against the collet via suitable attachment media from the side of the collet with only one central clamp, i.e., via the molded body tightly fitted to it. This allows central attachment, i.e., at the level of the guide groove. This is because interference between the attachment media and the guide groove can be avoided easily due to the tight fit of the molded body. This body lies laterally between the guide groove and the collet. The attachment media actuate on it from the side of the collet. If the wire guide according to the invention is designed with two wire guide halves, it has the additional advantage that simultaneous attachment of both halves to the collet is possible even though there is only one molded body. This thereby increases the safety of assembly and manufacture and makes it possible to achieve attachment relatively quickly and precisely, making it possible to force the wire guide more effectively against the collet, i.e., with even greater force. It is therefore possible to apply optimal clamping force. It is possible to mount the wire guide onto the collet according to the invention particularly quickly and inexpensively compared to previously known solutions.
All suitable attachment members may be used as attachments in the wire guide according to the invention. However, the preferred use calls for least one, preferably two, fastening screws inserted through the collet from the side opposite the wire guide block.
A preferred embodiment of the wire guide according to the invention is that the molded body should fit into a molded collet formed in the wire guide block, which is designed as an open molded groove (particularly preferable), and which extends in the direction of the guide groove and opening toward the side of the collet. Other suitable embodiments of the molded collet are also conceivable. If the molded collet takes the form of a molded groove, the latter preferably has the form of an essentially T-shaped cross section perpendicular to the guide groove. This results in a molded groove with a shape that is geometrically simple, easy to manufacture and extraordinarily effective. It is also easy to fit a suitable molded body to it.
In this process, the molded groove may be designed in such a way that it extends along the entire length of the wire guide block. This facilitates threading of the tightly fitted molded body from one of the two end surfaces of the wire guide block.
Preferably, the screw head of each fastening screw used as an attachment member in the wire guide according to the invention is braced against a base plate inserted between it and the collet on the side facing away from the wire guide block. This affords a simple yet very effective means of bracing.
The wire guide block according to the invention may also have a great advantage in that it is designed in such a way that it is divided at the center of the guide groove into a plane [sic] perpendicular to the latter and thus consists of two wire guide block halves featuring half of the guide groove each (and also half of the molded collet or molded groove formed in the wire guide block). In this embodiment, the molded groove may also preferably extend only over a portion of the total length of the wire guide block. Here the first section of the molded groove opens toward the collet, as seen in the direction of the guide groove, preferably extending over a shorter length than the length of the adjoining second section of the molded groove lying further inside the wire guide block and forming the crossbar of the T-shaped cross section of the molded groove. In this way, the molded body to be fitted tightly into the molded collet can be inserted easily by first inserting it in one of the two wire guide block halves and then slipping the second half over it.
In the wire guide according to the invention, the molded body can be executed in any form suitable for a tight fit in the molded groove or the molded collet. Particularly preferable is a groove stone with two sections, whereby the first section fits into the first section of the molded groove toward the side of the collet. At the same time, the adjoining second section of the molded body fits into the second section of the molded groove, whereby its length and/or its width perpendicular to it is larger than the allocated length or width of the first section of the molded body. A molded body executed in such a way may preferably be used both for a continuous form groove and for the design of the molded collet extending only over a portion of the total length of the wire guide block (in case of divided wire guide block halves), and in turn is a form that can be manufactured relatively easily and inexpensively.
The invention is explained in more detail and with basic examples below, whereby
The same references have been used for the same parts in all wire guide embodiments shown in the illustrations.
Reference is first made to the first embodiment of an undivided wire guide shown in
The wire guide 1 is part of a spring coiling machine (not show) and comprises an undivided wire guide block 3 as shown in more detail in the enlarged view in
As can be seen from
A molded body 6 is tightly fitted into the molded groove 5 shown in more detail in an enlarged view in
The molded body 6 actually consists of two molded sections, namely a first, smaller molded section 6.1, prone when mounted, in section 5.1 of the molded groove 5, which forms the cross bar of the T-shaped cross section of same and opens toward the collet 2 (see the view in
The larger section 6.2 of the molded body 6 adjoining section 6.1 protrudes in the mounted position into a section 5.2 lying inside the molded groove 5, which forms the cross bar of the T-shaped cross section of the molded groove 5 (as can be seen in
The molded body 6 is inserted from one of the two lateral end surfaces of the wire guide block 3 into the molded groove 5 until it reaches the desired position for the attachment, which corresponds to the position in
In the process, the depth t of the first section 6.1 of the molded body 6 (as measured diagonally to the longitudinal direction of the molded groove 5) is chosen to be as large as the corresponding depth t of the corresponding groove section 5.1 of the molded groove 5 opening toward the collet 2 (or somewhat smaller), while the depth T of the larger molded section 6.2 of the molded body 6 equals the depth T of the second section 5.2 of the molded groove 5 (here also: preferably somewhat smaller, allowing for an easy and safe insertion of the molded body 6 into the molded groove 5).
On the side of the smaller molded section 6.1 of the molded body 6 facing the collet 2 there are, as shown in
As can be seen clearly from
The wire guide 1 in
As
The molded body 6 shown in
As can be seen from the sectional view in
When using the shown wire guide, a wire (not shown in the illustrations) is fed out from a reel, then is driven via a number of individual rollers and is fed into the wire guide shown in
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